I think there is a difference between telling us you have a product (most of your current site), telling us you have a product that is probably somewhat valuable (the details in your blog post about how much effort was necessary to produce your styles), and telling us you have a product that is probably useful to us (demo pages/case studies showing the work in action, in contexts we might actually relate to from our own work).
Other ideas, for whatever they're worth:
1. If ever there was a site crying out for a trendy JS slide show on the home page to showcase lots of large graphics in limited space, this must be it.
2. You might like to look at what font sites do to showcase their new products. Like your styles, interesting fonts only really start to look useful when you see them working in context. For example, see the galleries at MyFonts or almost anything on H&FJ:
I think there is a difference between telling us you have a product (most of your current site), telling us you have a product that is probably somewhat valuable (the details in your blog post about how much effort was necessary to produce your styles), and telling us you have a product that is probably useful to us (demo pages/case studies showing the work in action, in contexts we might actually relate to from our own work).
Other ideas, for whatever they're worth:
1. If ever there was a site crying out for a trendy JS slide show on the home page to showcase lots of large graphics in limited space, this must be it.
2. You might like to look at what font sites do to showcase their new products. Like your styles, interesting fonts only really start to look useful when you see them working in context. For example, see the galleries at MyFonts or almost anything on H&FJ:
http://new.myfonts.com/fonts/laura-worthington/yana/gallery....
http://www.linotype.com/1175/zapfino-family.html# (the "Usage Samples" tab)
http://www.typography.com/